Sunday, November 14, 2010

Harrisburg Parking Garage Tour

Annette and I did not know what to expect, but whatever vague notions we had in our minds did not match what happened.  We were not mentally prepared.

The Harrisburg Camera Club had a photo shoot today.  The description of the shoot just said Downtown Harrisburg and the meeting location.

So when Annette and I got out of the car, we didn't want to lug around all of our gear so we both agreed that we would just take our cameras with the short lenses.  I guess we thought we were going to walk around the streets and shoot people or architecture.

We saw the Camera Club Group starting to walk away from the meeting place, so we ran to catch up.  That was when we learned that we were going to the top of a parking garage!

So up we go.  But from that perspective, a wide angle lens is not what you need.  You need a telephoto lens to zoom in on details of buildings or on far away buildings and sights.  So the first parking garage was a little bit of a bust!  But, I left that vantage point early and went back to the car and got our long lenses and tripods, both of which came in very handy!

In total, we went to the top of four parking garages in downtown Harrisburg!

Here are some of the pictures that I took.

 In the picture above I liked the G for Garthwaite and I liked the lion/gargoyle.  Do you think I should get rid of that drain?


 I liked the strong lines of this building to the left and the contrast between the colors and the contrast between the straight and rectangular features of the building and the more chaotic features of the leaves.



Similarly, I liked the straight and angular aspects of the building contrasting with the organic shapes of the tree.  The black of the building helped the yellow leaves to "pop".


The two pictures to the left are two different pieces of the same parking garage.  This garage was actually the third one that we climbed.  We were late getting there because we had a little detour.

Annette, Clara and Cheryl and I got off of the elevator one floor too soon.  We ended up at the Starbucks at what I guess to be the back of the Whitaker Center.  The girls had to have a coffee.  Clara wanted to buy but couldn't because she left her purse at home!  But it's the thought that counts!

While we were there, one of the Whitaker Center employees saw me standing with Annette's camera and my camera.  She asked if we did weddings.  I said, "Yes."  She asked, "Do you charge a lot?"  I said, "Yes."  But she was still interested in talking to us about shooting her wedding.  So we gave her a card and told her to look at other weddings we had shot and see if she liked our work.  Maybe we will hear from her.  Maybe we won't.


 I was just a little too late for this shot to the right.  Earlier in the day the sun was creating more interesting shadows on this white wall.  So, the lesson for both me and you is this:  Shoot it when you see it!  Don't wait!

We stayed until almost 5:00 p.m.  It was dark enough at that point for cars to have their lights on and I was able to get this picture with the streaks of red lights from the tail and brake lights.

Oh, well.  That was enough for us.  We had been shooting for four hours and we were ready to go home.

But still, it was a great day.  The weather was beautiful and we had the company of fellow photographers!

Saturday, November 13, 2010

Great Falls Kayakers

While we were at Great Falls National Park on October 30th, we had a great opportunity to watch some guys practice their kayaking skills.  From the observation platform, we watched as they came over the falls and made their way through the rocks and down the rapids.  Then they got out of the water and carried their kayaks upstream to try it again.

They were either practicing or they were showing off for the 20 or so people on the observation platform!

After they did this for a few times, they tried something different.

When water rushes over a fall it speeds up.  It then crashes into the water below and swirls back up in a "J" shaped flow.  At the tip of the "J" is a place where kayaks can sit without paddling and without going up or down stream.  This is the sweet spot where the kayak below started.

Once in that sweet spot they would rock the kayak backward and forward until the nose would go into the water, similar to what you see in the first two pictures.


Once the nose went under, the kayak would flip.  Just like this next sequence of pictures.

 
 
Then the kayak was upside down and they would have to roll the kayak to right it.  Their heads were under water for a few seconds!

It was really cool to watch and to shoot.  But I bet it was really COLD to do.  It looked like the guys had on wet suits.  But their faces and hands were still exposed.

Now remember, this is the last day of October!  That water wasn't 80 °F.  It was probably closer to 60°F.  I don't know how they did it!

We don't even like to get in our pool unless the water is 80°F!  The first time we went in our pool was on Memorial Day at the end of May.  The water was 68°F.  Everybody went in and got wet, but nobody stayed in the water for very long.  It felt like it was freezing!  What did this water feel like to these guys in these kayaks????

For you camera buffs...I took these pictures with a 70-200mm f/2.8 lens.  I really like this lens.  There is plenty of light so that I could freeze the action.

Monday, November 1, 2010

Great Falls - Reflections on a Great Day

On Saturday, The Harrisburg Camera Club went on another photo outing, this time to the C&O Canal National Historic Park near Potomac, MD.

But first...If you get a chance to drive through Potomac, MD, do it.  That has to be one of the richest areas in the country!  I wish I had the Mercedes-Benz dealership there.  It seemed like every other vehicle was a Mercedes!

And the houses!  Wow!  They were mansions.  Huge homes!  Massive homes!  Wow!

But anyway, the camera club went to the C&O Canal Park. We had to leave our house at 6:00, in the dark.  That is when I am normally just crawling out of bed on a work day!

It was just a gorgeous day.  The sun came up and the sky was blue.  It was a little chilly at first but warmed up to a manageable temperature.  Just beautiful!

Since it was the nearest thing to the parking lot, we started out by the C&O Canal Tavern with the sun just coming over the hill.  I tried to get some pictures of the Tavern reflected in the canal.


I got the reflection, but the tavern was in the shadow of the hill and was not in the sun light.  Kind of flat to me.

Next we crossed over the canal and found this large viewing platform.  This is the view...

Some times I think I am going to quit trying to take landscape pictures.  They never convey the feeling that you have when you are standing there.  This one gave me such a great tranquil feeling, the still water, the reflections, the beautiful sunlight.  But this picture only hints at the magnitude of the scene.

As we looked up the canal tow path, this is what we saw.  A beautiful scene complete with the trees providing shelter by arching over the path and the canal.  Assuming that these trees, or ones like them, were here by the canal in the days the canal was in use, imagine the cooling shade, the protection from the sun and the wind that these trees supplied!

Just downstream of the Tavern was a barge, which, for only $5, would allow you to climb aboard and enjoy a tow by mules up the canal. 



I wish I had seen the barge move.  It is one thing to know that they hitched the mules to the barge and had them pull the barge along the canal.  But it is another thing to actually see the mules accomplish this.  Without seeing it you have no idea of how much effort the mules had to exert.  You have no idea of how complicated, or not, it was for the mule handler to hitch up and control these animals.  And maybe there are other aspects to it that we cannot imagine, not having seen the barge in operation.

Not to be too obvious, but I am sure by now that you have figured out the "reflections" of the title has two layers.